The impact of ethnicity on clinical outcomes in COVID-19: A systematic review

Daniel Pan(University of Leicester), Shirley Sze(University of Leicester), Jatinder S. Minhas(University of Leicester), Mansoor N. Bangash(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Nilesh Pareek(King's College London), Pip Divall(Glenfield Hospital), Caroline Williams(University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust), Marco R. Oggioni(University of Leicester), Iain Squire(University of Leicester), Laura B Nellums(University of Nottingham), Wasim Hanif(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Kamlesh Khunti(University of Leicester), Manish Pareek(University of Leicester)
EClinicalMedicine
June 1, 2020
Cited by 565Open Access
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Abstract

Background: The relationship between ethnicity and COVID-19 is uncertain. We performed a systematic review to assess whether ethnicity has been reported in patients with COVID-19 and its relation to clinical outcomes. Methods: We searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, Cochrane Library and PROSPERO for English-language citations on ethnicity and COVID-19 (1 st December 2019-15 th May 2020). We also reviewed: COVID-19 articles in NEJM, Lancet, BMJ, JAMA, clinical trial protocols, grey literature, surveillance data and preprint articles on COVID-19 in MedRxiv to evaluate if the association between ethnicity and clinical outcomes were reported and what they showed. PROSPERO:180654. Findings: Of 207 articles in the database search, five reported ethnicity; two reported no association between ethnicity and mortality. Of 690 articles identified from medical journals, 12 reported ethnicity; three reported no association between ethnicity and mortality. Of 209 preprints, 34 reported ethnicity 13 found Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) individuals had an increased risk of infection with SARS-CoV-2 and 12 reported worse clinical outcomes, including ITU admission and mortality, in BAME patients compared to White patients. Of 12 grey literature reports, seven with original data reported poorer clinical outcomes in BAME groups compared to White groups. Interpretation: Data on ethnicity in patients with COVID-19 in the published medical literature remains limited. However, emerging data from the grey literature and preprint articles suggest BAME individuals are at an increased risk of acquiring SARS-CoV-2 infection compared to White individuals and also worse clinical outcomes from COVID-19. Further work on the role of ethnicity in the current pandemic is of urgent public health importance.


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